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SOCIETY. Dean of Diplomatic Corps Spending Holi- day Motoring in Mountains of Virginia. the embassy tomorrow from a motor trip in the Virginia moun- tains. e is accompanied by e second secretary of the embassy, Ussaki zade Bulent. The Ambassador of Peru, Senor Don Manuel de Freyre y Santander, is ex- pected to return to Washington tomor- row from Eagles Mere, Pa., where he was accompanied by his two children, Frank and Peggy, who will remain there until October. The Ambassador will join his children for short visits during | the Summer. Secretary of Interior Speaking At Morristown, New Jersey, today. The Secretary of the Interior, Mr. Harold Ickes, is spending today at Mor- | ristown, N. J. where he went to deliver an address at the opening of the na- | tional park. | Mr. Pranklin Roosevelt, jr., who will| sail tomorrow for Europe Wwas among the guests at the supper dance given by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Carnegie Phipps, at their home at Roslyn, Long Island, for their debutante daughter, Miss| Audrey Phipps. Among the other guests were Mr. George Whitney, jr., and Mrs. A. J. Drexel Paul, jr, who will sail with young Mr. Rogsevelt to- | morrow. | Rear Admiral Luke McNamee, presi- | dent of the Naval War College and Mrs. | McNamee, and the staff of the college, | will hold a reception July 14, for the new classes apd their families. Admiral and Mrs. Namee have a host of friends in Washington where Admiral m}nmu has been stationed several| es. The second secretary of the German embassy, Herr Lohmann is expected to return to Washington today from New York where he went to see Frau Loh- mann sail to spend some time in her home in Germany. The commercial counselor of the Swedish legation and Mme. Weldei have left Wuhm%n to visit friends in New England. ey will sail August 19| aboard the Kungsholm for Sweden to spend some time. | Miss Sallle Shallenberger, daughter of Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Martin Shal- lenberger, will' sail for Austria next week where she will be with her par- ents, Col. Shallenberger being military | attache of the United States embassy | in Vienna. B Baron and Baroness von Below have | closed their house at 2024 Sixteenth street northwest and have gone to the mountains of North Carolina for the rest of the Summer. They will not return to the Capital before October. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. McKen- ney will be hosts at dinner this evening in their home, Handleyhall, at Ken- sington, Md. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Merritt of | Washington are at the Weylin Hotel | in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam F. Dennis are spending some time at the Marlbor- ough-Blenheim at Atlantic City. Postmaster and Mrs. Willlam M. THE Ambassador of Turkey, Mr. Ahmet Muhtar, will return to | Dawning” were sung Mooney have as their guests over the| Fourth Mr. Mooney's sister and her| husband, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Grimes| of Steubenville, Ohio. They will all be holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard McKinley at their Summer home at Shadyside, Md., on| Chesapeake Bay. | Mr. and Mrs, Perry Belmont will sail | Thursday on the Ile de France. They will spend a short time in London and | then go to their home in Paris. Charles B. Drake last evening at an informal dinner, followed by bridge, and | earlier in the day she was an honor| guest at & luncheon given by Mrs. Wil- | gam Wheatley at the Chevy Chase lub. Mr. and Mrs. James Slater Davidson have as & guest their daughter, Mrs. Frederick S. Cross, whose home is in Wilmington, Del. Mrs. Cross formerly was Miss Louise Davidso: n. Granddaughter of Gov. Shepherd Married in Philadelphia Saturday. The marriage of Miss Mary Shep-| herd Wagner to Mr. John Howe Woods | took place July 1 in the First Presby- | terian Church in Philadelphia, the! pastor, Dr. Robert B. Whyte, officiating., Miss Wagner is a granddaughter of the | former Governor of the District, Alex- ander B. Shepherd, and daughter of the late Dr. Robert S. Wagner and Mrs. Isabel Shepherd Wagner. Woods will be at home Court, Overbrook, Pa. Mrs. Gerdld M. Loughlin is chairman of the subscribers for the production by Pierce Hall Players, of the new three- act comedy entitled “Little White Mice,” by E. de 8. Melcher, next Wednesday and Thursday evenings, July 12 and 13 in Plerce Hall. Rese: rd A Fine Assortment of BEVERAGE SETS SKETCHED Large size Glass Jug with Ice Lip. Stripes of Blue, Green and Red, with half- dozen Tumblers to match.. SET OF 7 PIECES Other 7-pc. Beverage Sets, $1.50 to $4.50 DuLIN @ | given at Tabard Inn by Miss Edith Allen, | trip and will be at home in the North- made th Mrs. Loughlin, or by call- ing the office of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, Columbia 10190. Miss Cath- erine Wheeler chairman of the ushers. Included in the cast of the play are | Maud Howell Smith, Olga Helms, Caro- lyn. Irish, Firtz Firey, Rose Mattem. E. de 8. Melcher, Howard L. Knight, Ed- mund Evans, William Rodon and Gor- don Backus. ‘Two weddings of interest in Arm Navy circles will next few weeks. ofstrom Craven, miral and Mrs. Th " chosen August 5 for the date of wedding to Mr. Lionel Glenn son. The ceremony will be performed in the bride-elect’s parents’ new home on the Severn River near Annapolis, with only a small company of relatives and close friends attending. Miss Margaret McKinley, daughter of the Adjutant General, U. 8. A, and Mrs. James F. McKinley, whose mar- riage to Lieut. Cogswell es, will take place Friday, July 28, will have as her maid of honor Miss Margaret Nixon, daughter of Col. and Mrs. Cortland Nix- on. The bridesmaids will be Miss Louise Livingston Smith of Philadelphia, Miss Janet Patterson, daughter of Surgeon General and Mrs. Robert U. Patterson, and Miss Jean Kingman, daughter of Col. and Mrs. John J. Kingman. ushers and best selected, but will Army officers. ‘The marriage of Miss Anna Mae Carder, daughter of Mrs. Albert 8. Wood of Wentworth, Mo, to Mr. Lee W. Quinn of this city took place at 6:30 o'clock p.m. Sunday at Calvary Baptist include a group of | Church. The ceremony was performed by Dr. W. 8. Abernetly, pastor of the church. ‘The decorations of cut flowers against a background of palms and ferns | created an unusually charming setting for the wedding. While the guests were by Mr. T. C. Crump of this city. ceding the ceremony “Because” and by Mrs. Parks Crater. The bride was given in marriage by her Sunday school teacher, Mr. John Ruthven. She wore a gown made on princess lines, designed with a short train and flowing cape sleeves and her net veil fell from a cap trimmed with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride roses, gardenias and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Everett G. Penn of Alexandris, Va., was the matron of honor, wearl a blue gown of mousselaine de sole hat to match trimmed with velvet rib- bon. She carried a small leather Bible with sfreamers spaced at intervals with roses. 'The other attendants w:er;‘ M(l:ss Virginia Quinn of Morganton, N. Miss Lillian Smith and Miss Nellie Fike both of Washington, D. C. They wore mousselaine de sole frocks in yellow. peach color and pink, respectively, and carried small leather-bound Bibles from which flowed ribbon ;trelm;{n mfiél:— ing their costumes and spaced & e vals with blended Talisman and Herbert Hoover roses. Their hats blended per- fectly with this combination. Rev. Philip G. Murray of New York was the best man and the ushers were Mr. Horace Strickland and Mr. Hunter Pritchard of Washington and Mr. Ray D. Quinn of Marion, N. C., brother of the bridegroom. Among the pre-nuptial parties of the bride was a shower at the home of Mrs. E. G. Penn, matron of honor. with Miss | . Laughlin and Mrs. Ed Driscoll as joint hostesses; another shower Was given by Miss Ann Thain and those present were members of the Euzelian Class of the First Baptist Church; a supper for the_entire wedding party 1619 Rhode Island avenue northwest, after the rehearsal cn Saturday evening, and a dinner on Sunday for out-of-town guests, including the sister and brother of the bridegroom, with Miss Lilllan Smith and Miss Nellle Fike as joint hostesses. Mr. and Mrs. Quinn left immediately after the reception on wedding umberland Apartments in Washington after July 15. Ma). Danlel Edward Murphy, U. 8. A., is the guest of his mother, Mrs. Anne E. Murphy, at the H?ehllnds. having come from Fort Bliss, Tex. Mr. Eben F. Comins has closed his Connecticut avenue studio for the Sum- mer and gone to East Gloucester, Mass. He will return in the Fall. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sundberg, Mr. Oscar Sundberg and Mrs. Clifford Covillon, who were in the city to attend the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Homer G. Slade, returned the first of the week to their home in Burlington, Vt. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Smith and their two children of Solomons Island, who have been guests of Mrs. Smith’s mother, Mrs. Carson E. Nef!, in Takoma Park, left Sunday for Ithaca, N. ¥, where Mr. Smith will take post-graduate work in the Cornell University during the Summer. - Dr. M. Ellsworth Olsen qf Takoma Beer Mucs Pressed Hobnail design. In Green, Blue, Amber or Crys- tal Glass of the proper weight for keeping beer cold ... 50c Others, 25¢ to 85¢ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. anad l” PABKING SERVICE—Connecticut Avenne ‘B-lr.u-—HOURS, LR - MRS. JULIUS G. LAY, assembling an organ recital was played | wife of the United States Minister to Honduras, with her husband, returning to P"':; Washington and expected here in the near future. —Harris-Ewing Photo. Park, is making s tour of New England, to be gone a couple of weeks. Mrs. Charles Stephenson of Westfleld, Pa. is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Detweller, and other rela- tives in Takoma Park. Mrs. W. Wayne Wirgman and daugh- ter, Miss Polly Wayne Wirgman, have moved to 2301 Connecticut avenue. Rev. and Mrs. Harry K. Christman and their children, Donald and Ruthie of Mount Vernon, Ohio, are the guests of Mrs. Christman’s rnenu. Rev. and Mra F. H. Robbins of Takoma Park. Mr. and Mrs. William H. McReynolds are taking a motor trip through Vir-| = ginia over the week end and holiday, stopping at Mountain Lake to enter their daughter Katherine in the Moun- tain Lake Camp for girls before con- tinuing to Culpeper to attend the horse show. Davis—Merriam Wedding in | Calvary M. E. Church Saturday. | ‘The wedding of Miss Helen Wirt Megriam, daughter of the late Dr. and |)lrl. Ephraim C. Merriam, to Mr. George Howlett Davis. son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Davis, took place Saturday afternoon July 1, at 4 o'clock, in Calvary Methodist Episco- al Church. The ceremony was per- ormed by Rev. Dr. Vernon N. Ridgley (o Russell Weaver Merriam, 3 erriam Linville and Mr. Later Mr. and Mrs. Davis left for Atlantic City and New York and after July 15 will be at home at 6606 Sixth street northwest. The Governor of Florids, Mr. Michael Bholtz, and his brother, Mr. Oarl Bholtz, are guests at the Shoreham. Hall of Middleport, of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Melvin H. Hopwood left Sunday | for Miami Beach, Fla., where she will | visit her sister, Mrs. Edna M. lord Bhe was accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. C. E. Thour, and her little daugh- fer, Anna May, and her daughter-in- | law, Mrs. Mason Hopwood, and Mrs. Warfleld, Mrs. Hopwood and her grand- daughter, Anna May, expect to remain s month, but the members of the party will return in about 10 days. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer‘Jenkins of Ta- koma Park are spending their vacation on a trip to Niagara Falls and South ter, Mass. The Alpha Delta Omega Fraternity gives its annual yachting party today, when 60 couples will enjoy the trip Reservations now being made. 16th Street ot H Orpeste he Wk Weoer CONVENIENT Large, ,attrac- tive, spacious, cool rooms overlooking the park. Rates uniformly resson- able...by the day, week or year. UNEXCELLED CUISINE * Luncheon .. ...... % De Luxe Dinner. 3150 Clearance $5 and $7.50 . Handbags TUESDAY, JULY %, 1933 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brackett of Ta- koma Park entertained Miss Mildred Speacht of Pottsville, Pa., last Sunday. ing & week at Babylon, Long First Tax in 47 Yean. Orsa, SBweden, famed “tax-free - ish,” 1s being taxed for the first in 47 years. BOCIETY.™ Town With Two Presidents. :{:fihmuammaoum how to oust him. So Demesa and Mendoza are ruling. KAPLO THE FASHION CENTER THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN E AND P WEDNESDAY &:30 PRIOR TO INVENTORES THE GREATEST SALE! g T XN LUNCHEON 11 AM. to PM., 25¢ to B¢ 12 _te 8:15 P.M. 4th OF JULY SPECIAL Regular l.-Co-rn. $1 75c Holiday Dinner, Today Other Delicious Dinners 85¢c, 65¢ Alse 8 Is Carie Bervies WoopwaRD & P=UTF o0 0 ) THE BEST CLOTHES AT A S_ACRIFICEI DRESSES $2 ™ 36 COATJ $5 ™ $8 WE ARE PRACTICALLY GIVING AWAY BEAUTIFUL CLOTHES Misses WOMENS JUNIOR MISSES AND HALF SIZES Lortror We believe 2,500- yards will scarcely be-enough to go around—it is such a grand value . Mallinson’s Indestructible Printed ~ Flat Chiffons $]25 ., In stock last week at $1.95 —and the price on the next shipment consider- ably higher, as the wholesale price has in- If you are seven- to-fourteen— these delightfully cool, fresh, new Tubbable Frocks are for you creased. It is plain to be seen that this is the sort of value that women will really appreci- ate. You know’how lovely the fabric is—but you must see the charming new designs— $].95 many of thenr created for an importer—all of them exclusively here. B1xs, Szconp Froom. . .and if you are three-to-six ,\,5 Tubbable Frocks Very specially priced Two hundred new ones— some for play, some for dress-up in the afternoon— 80 Mothers can find every frock or suit you need—at this very ]ifile cost, 75¢c. JuveNILES’ FROCKS AND SUTTS Fourrr Froom. —~ Our own smart models Our own fine bags, reduced for clearance, and the entire stock of the higher-priced models of a famous manufacturer. Paca pig—crys- tal hair grain—patent leather—shoe calf—pin Morocco. Designs of the sort one finds only in better bags—double-handled swaggers—Ilong- handled pouches with swinging pockets—tailored envelopes—framed pouch bags—double-zipper pockets—beautiful linirigs. And the trimmings of metal and marcasite are worth almost the price of the bags themselves! - There are Swisses and dimities and voiles and organdies—with erisp lit- tle rufles for sleeves— the most becoming frilled necklines (like this one sketched). And sueh lovely colors, Gmis’ Frocxs Fovrra PLOOR. Set the Youngest Set Out to Brown—in Sun Suits and Suits 50¢ to 81,50 »